Faster iPad Pro Charging: Can It Happen?

If you want to charge your iPad Pro faster than you normally can, faster iPad Pro charging could come at some point in the future.

Advertisement

The iPad Pro is Apple’s largest tablet yet, and it’s no doubt that it uses a lot of juice to operate, which can make charging it up a chore if you use the tablet often.

iPads have always used up more juice than iPhones, as the iPhone only needs a 5W charger to fill up the battery bar, whereas iPads need a 10W charger to adequately charge up. With the iPad Pro, you’d think that it maybe uses a 15W charger or so, but it actually only uses a 12W charger — just a hair better than the next size down.

So if you have an iPad Pro and have been complaining about how long it takes to charge up, the underpowered charger is likely the culprit.

Advertisement

Advertisement

The good news is that it might be possible for Apple to introduce something in the future that will allow iPad Pro users to charge up their tablets quicker than they can right now, as

It turns out that the iPad Pro can accept chargers larger than 12W. In fact, one person discovered (via iDownloadBlog) that the larger tablet can use up to a 29W charger, since the iPad Pro supports 14.5 volts at 2 amps, and since voltage x amperage = wattage, we get 29 watts as our answer.

It turns out that Apple already makes a 29W charger, albeit for the 12-inch MacBook, which means it has a USB-C port on it instead of a regular USB-A port, but it’s possible Apple could release an iPad Pro version of the charger.

“I tried charging the Pro using a USB-C to USB adapter and a Lightning cable and the charge time wasn’t any faster. I assume this is because of the limitations of a USB 2 cable. But with the Pro having a USB 3-compliant Lightning port, I bet it would charge faster with a USB 3 Lightning cable.”

And that also brings us to the improved Lightning port on the iPad Pro, which iDownloadBlog notes comes with 16 pins instead of just 8 pins like on other iOS devices. Lightning cables also come with 16 pins, so those extra 8 pins on the iPad Pro could allow for for more wattage to pass through, although it looks like a faster Lightning cable would need to be released from Apple, as the current Lightning cable doesn’t seem like it could handle 29W of power.

So could we see faster iPad Pro charging in the future at some point? It’s certainly possible, and Apple didn’t add those 8 extra pins to the Lightning port for nothing, so it seems that the company has some sort of plans up its sleeves for that.

One Response

0=12my co-worker’s sister makes $74 /hour on the laptop . She has been without work for six months but last month her payment was $19962 just working on the laptop for a few hours.
visit their website…. See More